Foreign News
Gabon Coup Leader, Nguema Vows Free Elections, Gives No Date
The leader of Gabon’s military junta has vowed to return power to civilians after “free, transparent” elections.
However, in a speech after being sworn in as interim president, he did not give a date for military rule to end.
Gen Brice Nguema led last Wednesday’s coup against Ali Bongo, toppling the president shortly after he was named winner of a disputed election.
Crowds of cheering civilians turned up at the inauguration – the coup was welcomed by many eager for change.
However, some say Gen Nguema’s rule will be a continuation of the 55-year Bongo dynasty.
Ali Bongo’s father, Omar, was in power for 41 years before he died in 2009 and was succeeded by his son.
The general, aged 48, spent most his career in the Bongo’s inner circle and is even thought to be Ali Bongo’s cousin.
At Monday’s inauguration, Gen Nguema gave a defiant speech, referencing the likes of South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu, French statesman Charles Fe Gaulle and former Ghanaian leader Jerry Rawlings.
“This patriotic action will be a lesson learnt that will be taught in the books of our schools,” said the new president, dressed in the red ceremonial costume of the Republican Guard.
He added that a fresh government would be formed “in a few days” and recommended new electoral legislation, a new penal code and a referendum on a new constitution.
Gen Nguema also said he had instructed the new government “to think without delay” about freeing all political prisoners.
The ceremony was broadcast live on Gabonese TV and across online platforms
Former ministers from the ousted government showed up, but were booed by a crowd of junta sympathisers.
The opposition has said it welcomes the removal of Mr Bongo from power but has called for a speedy return to civilian rule.
The defeated presidential candidate Albert Ondo Ossa told the Associated Press that the coup was a “palace revolution”, engineered by the Bongo family to retain their power.
Gen Nguema’s is the latest in a series of military takeovers across West and Central Africa.
Gabon is the sixth Francophone country to fall under military rule in the last three years as former colonial power France struggles to maintain its influence on the continent.
Gabon was suspended from the African Union following the coup, which has been condemned by the UN and France.
In his inauguration address on Monday, Gen Nguema said he was “surprised” at foreign criticism of the takeover. (BBC)
Foreign News
Boko Haram Militants Kill 23 Soldiers in Chad
The Chadian armed forces on Tuesday said that 23 soldiers were killed and 26 hurt in an attack by Islamist militant group Boko Haram on a base on the shores of Lake Chad.
Army spokesman Issakha Acheikh Chanane said that the attack late on Monday on the island of Barka Tolorom in Lake Chad was repelled by Chadian forces and that “a significant number of militants were neutralized.
”Chadian President Mahamat Idriss Déby Itno called the attack “cowardly” in a post on Facebook.
“In the face of barbarism, Chad stands firm, united, and unyielding,” the president said.
“Obscurantism will never prevail over the Republic. We will continue the fight with renewed determination until this threat is eradicated.”Boko Haram, which was founded in Nigeria in West Africa, has been carrying out repeated attacks in the neighbouring Central African countries of Chad and Cameroon for years.
The islands in Lake Chad in the common border area of the three countries are now the militia’s main retreat.
The worst attack in Chad occurred in March 2020 on the Bohoma peninsula, where around 100 soldiers were killed.
Foreign News
Sudan Accuses Ethiopia, UAE of Orchestrating Drone Attacks on Airport
Sudan has accused neighbouring Ethiopia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) of orchestrating drone strikes on its main airport, describing the assault as “Direct aggression”.
The international airport, located in the capital, was hit on Monday, along with military installations in the Greater Khartoum area.
Recent drone strikes have shattered a period of relative calm in Khartoum, which came after the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) was pushed out by the Sudanese military last year.
Ethiopia has said accusations that it was involved in the airport attack are “Baseless”.
The UAE has not yet commented, but has previously denied involvement in the Sudanese conflict.Sudan has recalled its ambassador to Ethiopia for “Consultations” over the attack, Foreign Minister Mohieddin Salem said.
No-one was wounded in the attack, Sudan’s information minister told the Reuters news agency.
Sudan’s army said it had “conclusive evidence” that the drones were launched from Bahir Dar airport in Ethiopia.
Sudanese military officials first accused the RSF of air attacks launched from inside Ethiopian territory in March.
They said they had tracked a drone, identified as Emirati property, entering Sudanese airspace from Ethiopia and eventually shot it down.
A Sudanese army spokesman alleged that they have now connected another drone, launched from the same airport, to Monday’s attack.
The UAE has in the past forcefully rejected claims that it provides military support to the RSF.
The latest attacks came a week after the first direct international commercial flight in three years landed at the airport.
The authorities were forced to announce a 72-hour suspension of operations at the airport following the attacks.
The airport has been a major battleground in the war between the regular army and the RSF, which began in 2023.
In February, Reuters reported that Ethiopia was hosting a camp to train RSF fighters and had upgraded the nearby Asosa airport for drone operations.
It said the move was backed by Ethiopia’s close ally, the United Arab Emirates.
On Monday, witnesses confirmed that they heard blasts and saw smoke rising from an area near the airport.
The attack is reported to have also caused minor damage to an administrative building.
The information ministry said the airport would return to operations after routine safety procedures.
Sudan’s foreign minister alleged that the drones had taken off from Ethiopia, despite Ethiopia being a “brotherly state” to Sudan. He said the UAE and Ethiopia had chosen the “wrong path” and would regret it.
Ethiopia’s foreign ministry said on Tuesday that Sudan and Ethiopia “share a historic and enduring bond of friendship” and had “refrained from publicising the grave violations of Ethiopia’s territorial integrity and national security committed by some belligerents in the Sudanese civil war”.
The ministry called for dialogue between the warring parties in Sudan.
Since the war in Sudan started, more than 150,000 people have died. Twelve million have fled their homes in what the UN has called the world’s largest humanitarian crisis.
The three-year civil war has also led to a famine and claims of a genocide in the western Darfur region.
Foreign News
Spain Deploys over 13,000 Officers for Pope’s June Visit
Spain will deploy more than 13,000 police officers to stave off “Multiple” potential threats to Pope Leo XIV’s visit from June 6 to 12, the interior minister said on Monday.
The pope is due to draw huge crowds in the historically deeply Catholic nation when he travels to Madrid, Barcelona and the Canary Islands.
Interior Minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska said that the highest level of a special security plan would be activated throughout the visit, the first by a pope to Spain since 2011.
More than 11,000 police officers and 2,200 Civil Guards would be deployed, while the contribution of additional local forces in the northeastern region of Catalonia that includes Barcelona was to be established, Marlaska added.
Marlaska reeled off a list of “multiple” potential threats, including terrorism, “but also radicalism, other movements such as social movements, which may naturally seize the opportunity to make themselves heard”.
After staying in the capital, Leo will inaugurate the newest and tallest tower of Barcelona’s Sagrada Familia Basilica, 100 years since the death of its Catalan architect Antoni Gaudi.
The Catholic Church declared Gaudi “venerable” in 2025 — the first step on the path to sainthood.
The American pope will then travel to the Canary Islands, an archipelago off the northwestern coast of Africa that is a major route for Europe-bound migrants.
Leo is a vocal defender of migrants, an issue which was also dear to his predecessor Pope Francis.
The fact that the visit “takes place in different territories obviously creates greater complexity for ensuring that it unfolds normally”, as all locations are “very different”, Marlaska said.
Simultaneous major events, such as a series of concerts in Madrid by Puerto Rican superstar Bad Bunny, “do not make it easy”, but Spain “has the resources” to secure all the sites, Marlaska said.


